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Yemen Protests Continue As Demonstrators Demand Ouster Of President Ali Abdullah Saleh

AHMED AL-HAJ   02/14/11 10:56 AM ET   AP

SANAA, Yemen — Thousands protested in Yemen for a fourth straight day Monday, demanding political reforms and the ouster of the U.S.-allied president in demonstrations inspired by the upheaval in Egypt.

The protests come even as the U.S. has embarked on a plan to deepen its involvement in training the country's counterterrorism force to counteract a local affiliate of al-Qaida that has mounted several attacks against the U.S.

University students, rights activists and lawmakers marched Monday in the capital, Sanaa. Lawyers in black robes, led by their union chief, joined the demonstrators shouting slogans against the security forces and "the people want the regime to step down," a slogan mirroring those used in Egypt and Tunisia.

"A revolution of free opinion ... A revolution of freedom ... We should decide," shouted the protesters.

A counter-demonstration of at least a hundred government supporters holding up pictures of President Ali Abdullah Saleh confronted the protesters, shouting slogans against terrorism and supporting the government's call for dialogue.

The two groups scuffled in front of the university and three people were injured, two from stones and one was stabbed a traditional Yemeni dagger.

Police finally separated the two groups before the protesters marched toward the city center gathering steam as they went shouting, "Leave, Saleh."

Lawyer Hassan al-Dola said the anti-government protest was against "the widespread corruption and against the security apparatus that terrified the people."

"We will continue our protests until the regime falls," independent lawmaker Ahmed Hashid said.

Dozens of women, meanwhile, demonstrated outside of the police intelligence headquarters in the capital, calling for the release of their sons.

Local and international journalists also reported being attacked by police and government supporters and beaten.

Similar demonstrations took place in Aden and Taaz shouting, "Saleh, you are good in words but not in rule."

In Taaz, police dispersed demonstrators with tear gas and firing rounds in the air. Twelve people were injured and dozens arrested.

On Sunday, police armed with sticks and daggers on Sunday beat back thousands of protesters marching through the Sanaa. The protests have mushroomed since crowds gathered Friday to celebrate the ouster of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak after an 18-day revolt fueled by similar grievances. Yemen is one of several countries in the Middle East feeling the aftershocks of pro-reform uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia.

Human Rights Watch said police on Sunday used electroshock tasers and batons to disperse protesters.

There were several checkpoints at streets leading to the presidential palace and some were blocked with barbed wire.

Sanaa state television said Sunday that because of the current situation in the region, Saleh, after he met with the U.S. ambassador to Yemen, canceled his visit to the United States scheduled for the end of this month.

Instead the president was reported to be visiting tribal areas around the capital to convince the powerful tribesmen not to join the protests.

Ties between the U.S. and Saleh have been growing lately over rising alarm in Washington about the activities of al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula

The U.S. military will begin a new training program with Yemen's counterterrorism unit, marking the first time the U.S. has trained the counterterrorism unit, which has traditionally focused on protecting Yemen's capital, according to a senior U.S. defense official. Under the plan, the training would begin in the next few months, and the Yemenis could more than double the size of their counterterror force, which now numbers about 300.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because details are still being worked out.

The plans come as the U.S. watched rippling public unrest rattle many of its Middle Eastern allies, including autocratic leaders such as Egypt's former President Hosni Mubarak, who stepped down Friday.

So far, U.S. defense officials said there has been no impact on U.S.-Yemen military cooperation as a result of the public protests, and that Yemen remains committed to its operations against AQAP.

The new training program in Yemen will cost about $75 million, the defense official said. And the goal is to create a national counterterror unit that will be better able and equipped to travel out to tribal regions and ferret out insurgents hiding there.

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SANAA, Yemen — Thousands protested in Yemen for a fourth straight day Monday, demanding political reforms and the ouster of the U.S.-allied president in demonstrations inspired by the upheaval i...
SANAA, Yemen — Thousands protested in Yemen for a fourth straight day Monday, demanding political reforms and the ouster of the U.S.-allied president in demonstrations inspired by the upheaval i...
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sampson2
Gardener
07:59 AM on 02/15/2011
There is definately something big happening throughout the Mid-East. I only hope our diplomacy is up to the task of protecting our interests without overt or covert meddling in their sovereignty.
08:15 AM on 02/15/2011
Duh !! They are fighting to keep the interest of their people above your interest in in their own nation.
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factfinder1
07:49 AM on 02/15/2011
Excuse me but where does Allah fit into this scenario if the rich of the muslim world have been playing this game and the rich of the christian world are equally at fault think about this the "real conspiracy" is for the poor to live and die for Allah ,Jesus ,Budda ,Krisna etc. .
Think about it the prefect set up get people to believe in something so desperately keep them at the poverty level believeing in a God who never seems to be on the side of the poor and you control them in the end it has nothing to do with God but who plays the best game of controlling the masses
07:29 AM on 02/15/2011
In Muslim lands there is anger and revealed details that show that the US is involved in helping to empoverish them. grants, aids and other under the table payments have enriched the despots and all the while, the people have not benefitted from any aid. The typical Yemeni is poor and the infrastructure is totally horrible.

Again, this is the same scenario that is being played out in Muslim lands, where by the government the henchmen and women who run the country are fatten from US aid and this money does not trickle down.

These despots purchase arms and the security forces are trained by the US and some of the most brutal regimes exist under the US banner, are in Muslim lands.

The rights of the Muslimeen in the region have taken a back seat to the American and Israeli agenda. The despots get paid for running despotic regimes and keeping Islamic tenets from surfacing. Since Wikileaks exposed Pres Salah and the rest of the despots, the Muslimeen in Yemen are tired, fed up and don't want anymore American intervention and interdiction in their lands. For they are keen to the fact that the US gov doubles talks them, with speeches of human rights and rights to elect but the reality is that only apostates and despots are eligible under the US mandate against Islamic governance.

There is going to be unrest for a long time in Muslim lands, especially those that receive funds, arms and backing from US.
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david5000
Detective & Pilot
07:40 AM on 02/15/2011
Wrong.

The leaders are learning the mistakes of others, they will crack the whip and Egypt will not be repeated.

Even in Tunisia, the regime still intact minus a couple of characters and the protesters are tasting the tear gas on a daily basis.

Here is the new of engagement:

Cut the power, you lose the internet, the cellphones after the batteries run down, cut the phone lines, and impose curfews.

If that is not enough, the violent dark shirts will be unleashed to bring down any type of insurgency.

It's easy to say democracy than it is done in countries that are 3, 4, 5, 6 thousand years old.
05:13 AM on 02/15/2011
They protest for freedom but don't know what it means. They are all going to end up police states.
07:02 AM on 02/15/2011
what does it mean
sampson2
Gardener
08:07 AM on 02/15/2011
We keep seeing protesters screaming freedom but suspect what they really want is food and an end to corruption along with some basic improvements in their standard of living along with a degree of self-determination. Which I guess pretty much comprises a sense of freedom.
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blessedfrog
save habeas corpus
02:05 AM on 02/15/2011
Just saw Ann Coulter on Chris Mathews

She drew thunderous applause for saying, ' Journalists are jailed? More journalists should be jailed!'

The right is NOT for freedom or full disclosure or analytical examination or even simple reporting of what is going on.

How sick
07:02 AM on 02/15/2011
Ann Coulter knows her audience like Pavlov knew his dogs.
sampson2
Gardener
08:08 AM on 02/15/2011
Ann who???
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blessedfrog
save habeas corpus
02:02 AM on 02/15/2011
No one is free when others are oppressed
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Krisgi
On a clear day you can see Ibiza...
02:06 AM on 02/15/2011
f/f
01:38 AM on 02/15/2011
The country I want to see rebel is India. They have had unrest there before. Very similar to Egypt. The haves and the have nots. If what happened in Egypt were to happen in India it would bring half the American economy to it's knees. What US company does not have it's technical support in India? THAT should punish all of the American companies that outsourced jobs over there. India and Pakistan are not exactly best buds either.
02:25 AM on 02/15/2011
what every people on earth would like to have a revolution is in north korea. but that is unlikely to the utmost degree because north koreans have intense hatred to the west and everything western including democracy. if facebook, tweeter and individuals like wael ghonim manage to dispel fear from the egyptians, it would take a lifetime and even countless social media networks to do the same for north korea. but the arab world is rising. its a spark that will ignite a burning flame.
05:32 PM on 02/15/2011
Plus they are another country with a million man army. Well trained? Probably not but neither were the Viet Cong. It was sheer numbers.
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Dham4201
01:35 AM on 02/15/2011
Yes, the rise in democracy in the Middle East is going to coincide nicely with the fall of the American Empire
07:00 AM on 02/15/2011
yep. Unless Americans get angry enough to demand the changes they want nothing will change. We aren't there yet. Getting there, but not there yet
sampson2
Gardener
08:19 AM on 02/15/2011
I suspect it is going to take a higher rate of unemployment and food scarcity, probably related to price rather than supply. We may be getting close with the employment factor if the "true" rate of unemployment, which I have heard is as high as 17% when the under employed and those who left the job market are considered, rather than the 9% regularly repeated in our media.
11:10 PM on 02/14/2011
This is all because of President Bush. One of the reasons he invaded Iraq was because he thought if Iraq became a Democracy smack dab in the middle of the Middle East maybe just maybe the rest of the Middle East would want to join them. Well. Well. Looks like the dominos are falling.
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MattPatrick
Throw away the dogma, keep your dog.
11:36 PM on 02/14/2011
Laughable.
11:43 PM on 02/14/2011
oh yes, and it has become such a sparkling model for representative democracy, hasn't t?
02:56 PM on 02/15/2011
True
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Steve Rockett
09:53 PM on 02/14/2011
Free democracy, now!
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
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SimonLeigh
09:20 PM on 02/14/2011
There seems to be a pattern evolving. America's long-time support of the corrupt yet controllable dictators and tyrants of the world is being seen as oppression. It's almost as if America's formerly collossal wealth, and its threat and expanding use of the world's greatest-ever military power is seen as oppression of the will of the people. Wonder why? Any free election, anywhere, will now be anti-American, which is a scary thought for the American military; they'll be really busy all over the middle east, not to mention South America. And Indonesia. Hell, even Australia, whose national hero is Julian Assange but whose PM doesn't dare offend America by saying so.
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Steve Rockett
09:55 PM on 02/14/2011
I do not see these protests against America, per se. I see them against oppression and pro democracy. We need to stand back and let George Washington emerge in each nation. I am thrilled to see Achoo in Iran being challenged. Democracy now around the world. Give people freedom of choice.
08:40 PM on 02/14/2011
Bring on the democracy!
12:47 AM on 02/15/2011
how do you feel about that when they don't agree with you?
09:59 AM on 02/15/2011
Would you prefer to have billions of people in other lands live in poverty, with no say over their destiny under corrupt, wealthy, oppressive regimes, that won't always agree with you either, to have your way with the world?
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ShoreSage
07:36 PM on 02/14/2011
Can Hamas be far behind??
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logicanada
Blogger, radio co-host, writer, editor, voice-over
07:46 PM on 02/14/2011
Hamas was democratically elected. The Palestinian Authority resigned today, to the last man.